Vinyl Floorcovering

Background

Vinyl floorcovering is defined as either resilient vinyl sheet
floorcovering or resilient vinyl tile floorcovering. Vinyl sheet
floor-covering is generally available in either 6 ft (1.83 m) or 12 ft
(3.66 m) widths and vinyl tiles are generally 12 x 12 in (30.48 x 30.48
cm). Sheet goods are generally retailed with no sticky backing. Thus,
adhesives need to be purchased to adhere the flooring to underlayment.
Vinyl tiles may be purchased dry or with a pressure-sensitive glue backing
protected by a paper covering that must be removed by the installer.

Vinyl sheet flooring, particularly, varies in thickness and in manner
decorated. Thinner sheet vinyl is 10-15 mils (mils are a thousandths of an
inch) in thickness as opposed to longer wearing sheet vinyl (which is also
more expensive) that may be 25-30 mils thick. Patterns may be printed with
a rotary press (called rotogravure printing) or with large plates engraved
intaglio with the design engraved below the surface of the metal. Both
printing methods impress a pattern on top of the gel layer of foam and
underneath the wear layer, rendering a relatively durable pattern.

These vinyl floorcoverings are preferred by many homeowners for their ease
of installation—many do-it-yourselfers are able to install them
with relative ease. However, vinyl sheet floorcoverings that are 25-30
mils may difficult to handle or install for the unskilled homeowner. The
vinyl tiles are far easier to install and are the vinyl flooring most
often installed by the home-owner. Furthermore unlike other flooring
materials, sharp blades will easily cut the vinyl flooring so that it may
conform to corners, cabinets, and curves.

In addition, vinyl floorcoverings may be applied over old flooring, and
are easily cleaned with a vacuum or a mop with soap and warm water. To the
delight of many householders, with proper care, many brands do not require
waxing. Polyurethane coatings render a high-gloss finish that emulates a
shiny, waxy surface and generally stays rather shiny over the years. If
dulled, a special vinyl floor finish may be applied. However, vinyl
floorcoverings are not as durable as ceramic tile and will have to be
replaced periodically.

As with many household materials, vinyl sheet and tile flooring comes in
residential grade and commercial grade. Residential vinyl flooring varies
in thickness, method used for imprinting or decorating, and style.
Commercial vinyl floorcoverings conform to specifications that require
superior durability and stain resistance (particularly use-ful in hospital
settings). Some commercial-grade vinyl floorcovering is non-slip for high
public traffic areas.

History

Housewives have long known that a hard, relatively waterproof surface
makes a fine floorcovering. Tamped earth mixed with ox blood dried into an
easily-swept surface in primitive homes. Painted wooden floors were
relatively easily maintained but had to be renewed at some effort. It was
particularly troublesome keeping carpeting clean in eating areas such as
dining rooms. In the early eighteenth century, floor cloths, which were
large squares of fabric, were laid under
dining tables to catch wayward crumbs. These floor cloths were simply
taken outside and shaken free of crumbs and returned to their spot under
the table.

However, later in the 1700s, someone decided that the floor cloth could be
improved upon if a relatively sturdy fabric such as canvas, hemp, or linen
was coated with and evaporating oil and paint and thus made waterproof.
Easy to scrub and sweep, these floor oilcloths were quite an improvement
over the fabric floor cloths. Better yet, these oilcloths were inexpensive
and could be hand made at home or purchased mass produced later in the
nineteenth century. From there it was a quick hop to linoleum which was
manufactured from linseed oil, cork gums, and pigment. This leather-like
floor-covering was mass produced by 1890 both in the United States and
abroad.

Linoleum was tremendously popular from 1900 until after the World War II
when floorcovering manufacturers sought to replace linoleum with other
long-wearing fashionable, easily maintained floorcoverings. By the late
1950s, resilient floorcoverings were here at last—these included
vinyl flooring which gives slightly as one walks across it. These vinyl
floorcoverings were far brighter and more colorful than linoleum because
the vinyl floorcoverings were made with a clear vinyl gel which made the
printed colors vibrant. As a 1960 Sears Catalog proclaimed about vinyl
floorcoverings: "All gloss and glow—no hard work!"

Raw Materials

The primary components of vinyl floorcoverings include polyvinyl chloride
(or vinyl) resins, plasticizers (high molecular-weight solvents), pigments
and trace stabilizers, and a carrier sheet or backing. The backing may be
felt or highly filled paper made from wood pulp and calcium carbonate.
High-gloss surface vinyl sheets or vinyl tiles have an additional
polyurethane coating applied at the end of the process. The glue applied
to the back of some vinyl tiles (to make a pressure-sensitive adhesive) is
made from organic resins.

Design

The design departments of vinyl floorcovering companies are constantly
seeking new inspiration for successful patterns and colors that will work
in sheet and tile form. The designers work with marketing groups to
determine what colors and styles will capture the public's interest
as much as five years from current production. The designs are transferred
from drawing to computer, and mock-ups of the different patterns are
produced in an array of colors. The designs are then printed off of the
computer on full-size paper and in full color.

If a full-scale paper pattern is approved for further development,
printing plates either 18 x 24 in (45.72 x 61 cm) or 24 x 36 in (61 x
91.44 cm) in size are created by engravers. These plates are then used to
print samples of the pattern on undecorated flooring (called gel stock) as
prototypes. The wear layer, or final, often shiny surface of the sheet
flooring, is applied over the printed pattern, so the designers have a
close approximation of the finished product.

The prototype is either approved as is, retooled, or dropped. The time it
takes from design to market varies from as little as three months or as
long as six months.

The Manufacturing
Process

Making the vinyl sheet
floorcovering

1 Vinyl resins and plasticizers are stirred together in a vat to make a
plastisol. To this plastisol, AZO compound (which consists of two
nitrogen atoms that are united at both ends to separate carbon atoms) is
added. When the resins, plasticizers, and AZO compound is heated, the
AZO compound decomposes forming nitrogen gas bubbles. From this mixture,
a vinyl foam is produced. This vinyl foam has the consistency of pancake
batter and can be spread, in a slurry, onto the installation medium or
backing.

2 The slurry is laid down on the felt or wood pulp backing via a reverse
roll coater—it is poured on and smoothed out. The coated sheet
then goes through an oven where the vinyl foam is gelled. The oven is
heated just enough for the vinyl resin to absorb the plasticizer and
set.

Vinyl resins and plasticizers are stirred together in a vat to make
a plastisol, which is then heated to form a batter.

3 At this point, the gel is run through a printing press and is
impressed with metal intaglio plates (with pattern carved beneath the
surface of the metal). This impresses the pattern into the gel sheet,
creating the decorative pattern.

4 A second mixing of plasticizer and vinyl are applied on the printed
gel. The gel (with backing) is run through an oven at an even higher
temperature. In the oven, the vinyl resin absorbs the plasticizer and
melts, creating a clear vinyl. This is known as the wear layer, which
takes the brunt of foot traffic. Printed patterns and inlaid patterns
are thus protected under this wear layer rendering the pattern durable.

5 If the pattern requires a matte finish, the sheet vinyl is essentially
ready to be rolled. However, patterns designed with a high gloss finish
receive a layer of polyurethane coating via rollers. The thickness of
this coating is controlled with an air knife to insure a consistent
thickness. The polyurethane coating is cured photochemically with
ultraviolet radiation lamps and is ready to be rolled.

6 The matte or high-gloss vinyl sheet flooring is then cut to rolls that
are 12 ft (3.66 m) wide x 1,500 ft (457.2 m) long that can be subdivided
based on the needs of retailers.

Creating vinyl tile floorcovering

7 Vinyl tiles are made a bit differently than vinyl sheet flooring. The
polyvinyl chloride resins are mixed with calcium carbonate,
plasticizers, and pigments in a large industrial mixer.

8 The mixture is heated to melting and consolidated. The friction from
the mixing blades produces a compound with the consistency of bread
dough. The dough-like substance is put through calendar rollers and the
material is squeezed into sheets.

9 The sheets are embossed while still in rolls. Once decorated, the
sheet is then cut into individual tiles with a die cutting machine,
resembling multiple cookie cutters.

10 The tile squares (12 x 12 in or 30.48 x 30.48 cm) are cooled and put
into a box if they are dry sheets (without pressure-sensitive glue on
the back). If they are to receive glue for affixing to the floor, a
roll-coater carrying organic resins deposits the glue on the tile
backing. A paper cover that protects the glue is put over backing. The
tiles are boxed (in boxes of 10 or 12) and ready for shipment.

Quality Control

As with most manufactured goods, all raw materials (polyvinyl chloride
resins, plasticizers,

The vinyl foam batter is spread onto the baking and heated, forming
a sheet. The pattern is then printed on the flooring and a wear
layer is applied.

pigments, stabilizers, and the installation medium) are checked to insure
they meet minimum quality standards of production for the company. Felt or
paper backings are checked for thickness and tensile strength. Physical
tests are performed on coatings—viscosity, lumpiness, etc. are
examined. If all ingredients are chemically and physically adequate to
render a quality product, the manufacturing can begin.

Throughout all phases of production, intermediary checks are made to
insure that standards are met. Members of the production staff perform
visual checks on all pieces. If the larger roll does have contain an
imperfection, quality control personnel adjust the computerized cut map
that informs the cutting machines to cut around imperfections.

Commercial tiles and sheet vinyl used by Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) undergo an array of
testing including minimum thickness requirement, durability, flammability,
etc.

Byproducts/Waste

No hazardous materials are unleashed into the environment as a byproduct
of the manufacture of vinyl floorcovering. Waste products are either
recycled at the point of manufacture or sent to a reclaimer for disposal.
The heavy metal stabilizers and pigments used by the vinyl floorcovering
industry were replaced years ago with those considered more
environmentally safe. Presently, the industry is examining ways to utilize
waste vinyl which results from manufacture as well as recycle or reclaim
the scrap vinyl floorcovering discarded by the consumer.